Lauryn Hill fans had much to be thankful for this week, as the Grammy-winning hip-hop star performed a Thanksgiving eve show at N.Y.C.'s Bowery Ballroom.

This was Hill's first onstage appearance since serving three months in federal prison for tax evasion. In fact, the minimum-security, all-female facility in Danbury, Conn., where Hill was incarcerated just happens to be the same one that inspired Netflix's hit series Orange Is the New Black. While the show is set at a prison in Litchfield, N.Y., it's based on the Danbury institution, where author Piper Kerman also did time.

So, we got to thinking: If Hill appeared on Season 2 of OITNB, how would the former Fugee fit in at the Litch? Here are some plotlines we imagined for her.

"She was released several days early based on a number of factors the Bureau of Prisons takes into consideration, including good behavior," her attorney Nathan Hochman tells PEOPLE. "She will now start today a one-year period of probation with three months of home confinement during that year."

The Grammy-winning singer was convicted in May of failing to pay nearly $1 million in taxes. She told the judge she had always meant to eventually pay the taxes, but was unable to during a period of time when she dropped out of the music business.

The punishment, which includes an additional three months of house arrest after she checks out of prison, was sent down in May after she was found guilty of failing to pay nearly $1 million in taxes.

She recently posted an open letter on her Tumblr page, where she ranted about slavery and the IRS. "I shuddered during sentencing when I kept hearing the term 'make the IRS whole' ... make the IRS whole, knowing that I got into these very circumstances having to deal with the very energies of inequity and resistance that created and perpetuated these savage inequalities," she wrote.

Lauryn Hill was sentenced Monday to three months in prison and an additional three months in home confinement for failing to pay taxes on about $1 million in earnings.

The Grammy-winning singer, a South Orange, N.J., resident, pleaded guilty last year in the case.

During a forceful statement to the judge Monday, Hill, 37, explained she had always meant to eventually pay the taxes but was unable to during a period of time when she dropped out of the music business, echoing a defense she wrote last year in a long post online.

"I needed to be able to earn so I could pay my taxes, without compromising the health and welfare of my children, and I was being denied that," Hill said Monday, without explaining what exactly triggered her actions.

Lauryn Hill is speaking out about her new baby – and warning people not to make assumptions about his father.

Hill, who welcomed her sixth child last weekend, responded to speculation that Rohan Marley, Bob Marley's son and the father of her other five children, is her new son's dad. And by mentioning the five children they have together, she seems to rule Marley out as the parent of her youngest child, who's reportedly named Baby Boy Marley.

"Mr. Marley and I have a long and complex history about which MANY inaccuracies have been reported since the beginning," the soul singer, 36, writes on her official Web site. "To speculate without the facts can only cause people to form WRONG conclusions."

After a nearly 2-year hiatus from the music scene, hip-hop singer Lauryn Hill will return to the stage this summer, according to a report by Billboard.

The former Fugees singer is scheduled to perform at the five-day Stockholm Jazz Fest in July, according to festival spokesman Gunnar Lagerman. This will be Hill's second time headlining the Swedish festival, which is expected to draw up to 30,000 people. Other confirmed artists include tenor saxophonist Sonny Rollins and Brazilian singer Gilberto Gil.

Hill, who gave birth to her fifth child with Rohan Marley last January, hasn't performed publicly since 2007
– Tiffany McGee